Marine Weather and Tide Forecast for Catskill, NY

December 2, 2023 12:25 AM EST (05:25 UTC)
Sunrise 7:03AM Sunset 4:27PM Moonrise 10:17PM Moonset 12:40PM
ANZ335 Long Island Sound West Of New Haven Ct/port Jefferson Ny- 933 Pm Est Fri Dec 1 2023
Overnight..SW winds 5 to 10 kt. Seas 1 ft or less. Rain late this evening, then chance of rain. Patchy fog. Vsby 1 to 3 nm.
Sat..SW winds around 5 kt. Seas 1 ft or less. Patchy fog. Vsby 1 to 3 nm.
Sat night..NW winds around 5 kt, becoming ne after midnight. Seas 1 ft or less. Slight chance of rain in the evening, then rain likely after midnight.
Sun..NE winds 10 to 15 kt. Seas 1 ft or less, then 1 to 2 ft in the afternoon. Rain.
Sun night..NE winds 10 to 15 kt, becoming W after midnight. Gusts up to 25 kt. Seas around 2 ft. Rain, mainly in the evening.
Mon..W winds 15 to 20 kt with gusts up to 25 kt. Seas 2 to 3 ft.
Mon night..W winds 15 to 20 kt, becoming nw 10 to 15 kt after midnight. Seas 2 to 3 ft.
Tue..NW winds 10 to 15 kt with gusts up to 20 kt. Seas around 2 ft.
Tue night..NW winds 5 to 10 kt. Seas 1 ft or less.
Wed..N winds around 10 kt with gusts up to 20 kt. Seas 1 ft or less.
Wed night..N winds around 10 kt with gusts up to 20 kt. Seas 1 ft or less.
Overnight..SW winds 5 to 10 kt. Seas 1 ft or less. Rain late this evening, then chance of rain. Patchy fog. Vsby 1 to 3 nm.
Sat..SW winds around 5 kt. Seas 1 ft or less. Patchy fog. Vsby 1 to 3 nm.
Sat night..NW winds around 5 kt, becoming ne after midnight. Seas 1 ft or less. Slight chance of rain in the evening, then rain likely after midnight.
Sun..NE winds 10 to 15 kt. Seas 1 ft or less, then 1 to 2 ft in the afternoon. Rain.
Sun night..NE winds 10 to 15 kt, becoming W after midnight. Gusts up to 25 kt. Seas around 2 ft. Rain, mainly in the evening.
Mon..W winds 15 to 20 kt with gusts up to 25 kt. Seas 2 to 3 ft.
Mon night..W winds 15 to 20 kt, becoming nw 10 to 15 kt after midnight. Seas 2 to 3 ft.
Tue..NW winds 10 to 15 kt with gusts up to 20 kt. Seas around 2 ft.
Tue night..NW winds 5 to 10 kt. Seas 1 ft or less.
Wed..N winds around 10 kt with gusts up to 20 kt. Seas 1 ft or less.
Wed night..N winds around 10 kt with gusts up to 20 kt. Seas 1 ft or less.
ANZ300 933 Pm Est Fri Dec 1 2023
Synopsis for the long island and connecticut coastal waters.. A weak wave of low pressure will impact the region through tonight. Another low moving toward the great lakes on Sunday will weaken, with a secondary low forming south of long island on Sunday. The low pressure lifts northeast of the area Sunday night. A trough of low pressure lingers on Monday with high pressure returning for Tuesday. Another low develops off the middle atlantic coast on Wednesday.
Synopsis for the long island and connecticut coastal waters.. A weak wave of low pressure will impact the region through tonight. Another low moving toward the great lakes on Sunday will weaken, with a secondary low forming south of long island on Sunday. The low pressure lifts northeast of the area Sunday night. A trough of low pressure lingers on Monday with high pressure returning for Tuesday. Another low develops off the middle atlantic coast on Wednesday.

Area Discussion for - Albany, NY
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FXUS61 KALY 020303 AFDALY
AREA FORECAST DISCUSSION National Weather Service Albany NY 1003 PM EST Fri Dec 1 2023
SYNOPSIS
A disturbance and front will continue to bring rain into this evening before tapering off tonight. There will be plenty of clouds around on Saturday, with a few light showers as a weak area of low pressure tracks across upstate New York. Then, a more substantial storm system looks to bring widespread precipitation arriving early Sunday and lasting into Monday. At this time, mostly rain is expected for lower elevations, while higher elevations could see some wet snow mixed in at times.
NEAR TERM /THROUGH SATURDAY/
Most of the precipitation is gone and just isolated to scattered showers in northern areas could linger after midnight, based on satellite and radar trends and near term mesoscale model guidance. Just minor adjustments to rain chances, sky cover and temperatures through the night.
PREVIOUS DISCUSSION: Areas of rain, mainly light in intensity, will continue into early this evening associated with the passage of an upper level short wave disturbance. At the surface, a front will be draped from SW to NE across Lake Ontario into the St Lawrence Valley and will remain quasi-stationary. Our area will be on the warm side of the front tonight. Plenty of low level moisture lingering, so while steady rain should end during the evening it will be cloudy through the rest of the night. Lows will be mainly in the mid/upper 30s, with some lower 30s in mountain areas.
On Saturday, the front will likely remain stalled to the north of our area, with flat ridging aloft and a mild SW flow.
However, at the surface it will still be somewhat cool due to expected cloud cover and an inversion. In term of precip chances, a weakening area of low pressure looks to track across the lower Great Lakes and along the stalled front over northern NY through the day. Most of the precip will be north of our area, but the low will be close enough to bring some showers to areas mainly north of I-90. Chances for showers will decrease by later in the day as the system weakens considerably. Highs expected to range from upper 30s/lower 40s north to lower 50s south. Despite clouds, it will be mild for early Dec.
SHORT TERM /SATURDAY NIGHT THROUGH MONDAY/
Sat night looks to be fairly quiet into the early overnight hour, however as high pressure drifts east across Quebec low level sub- freezing air could seep southward into parts of the Adirondacks and southern Greens of VT. Low level moisture trapped beneath a strengthening subsidence inversion could lead to patchy freezing drizzle where temperatures are 32F or less.
This should be fairly localized, but will have to watch for some icy spots on untreated surfaces. Across most of the area, it will just be mostly cloudy and mild with chances for showers gradually increasing as low pressure start to approach from the south/west. Lows expected to range from the lower 30s in coldest spots of the Adirondacks and southern Greens, with mid to upper 30s elsewhere.
The active pattern continues, with the next storm system already moving in from the south/west by Sunday morning.
Guidance depicting a stronger system with a potent upper level short wave and a dual-cyclone set up at the surface. There is high confidence in widespread moderate QPF, but the main question is regards to precip types. This will be highly dependent on the strength of the primary(inland) vs secondary(coastal) cyclone. If the primary low maintains its relative strength, then mainly rain would be expected. However, if the secondary cyclone ends up being stronger then some snow would be possible across northern and especially higher elevation areas such as the Adirondacks and southern Greens. At this time, highs expected to be in the 30s for the Adirondacks/S. Greens, with 40s elsewhere. With an initial push of milder air aloft with the primary cyclone, snow would be more favored later in the day into Sun evening should the latter scenario play out. For areas along and south of the Thruway mostly rain is expected, except possibly mixing with snow before ending Sun night with minimal impacts.
With an open wave trough aloft, the system should move through fairly quickly with steady precip expected to end late Sun night into early Mon morning. There could be some wrap-around/upslope snow showers into the western Adirondacks, otherwise just some scattered light rain/snow showers associated with the passage of an upper level trough axis. It will continue to be mostly cloudy with westerly winds increasing and becoming gusty in wake of the departing storm system. Highs Mon should be in the 40s for lower elevations and 30s in the mountains.
LONG TERM /MONDAY NIGHT THROUGH FRIDAY/
No significant storms expected in the long term, although there will be some nuisance unsettled weather at times. Overall pattern looks to feature a broad upper level trough across the Great Lakes and Northeast, with a few minor disturbances passing through at times through Wed. Temperature will trend slightly below normal through the period, so any precip that falls will be in the form of snow showers. Best chances would be across higher terrain upslope areas such as the western Adirondacks and southern Greens, with little activity outside these areas. Even there, mainly just scattered snow showers expected with only minor accumulation in some spots.
A clipper-type system may affect at least parts of the region in the Thu night to Fri time frame. However, there is considerable spread in the guidance with regards to its track, so for now will just mention slight to low chance PoPs and mostly confined to higher terrain areas. This could bring some accumulating snow to some areas depending on the eventual track.
Temperatures should remain slightly below normal through next week.
AVIATION /03Z SATURDAY THROUGH WEDNESDAY/
Mainly VFR in light rain. Some MVFR visibilities at times at KGFL in more steady rain. As the low levels gradually saturate, some lower clouds should form and some fog could form, too.
Indicating MVFR ceilings developing through the evening at all TAF sites and MVFR ceilings continuing through the day Saturday, as the frontal boundary does not move much as low level moisture remains. MVFR visibilities possible in steadier rain this evening at all TAF sites but lingering a bit longer around KGFL, through about 11Z. VFR visibilities Saturday morning and afternoon as the rain will have exited but again, clouds lingering all day.
Light and variable, mainly light south winds at less than 6 Kt tonight, continuing through Saturday morning and afternoon.
Outlook...
Saturday Night: Moderate Operational Impact
Chance of RA
DZ.
Sunday: High Operational Impact. Definite RA.
Sunday Night: High Operational Impact. Definite RA.
Monday: Moderate Operational Impact. Chance of SHRA.
Monday Night: No Operational Impact. NO SIG WX.
Tuesday: No Operational Impact. NO SIG WX.
Tuesday Night: No Operational Impact. NO SIG WX.
Wednesday: No Operational Impact. NO SIG WX.
ALY WATCHES/WARNINGS/ADVISORIES
CT...None.
NY...None.
MA...None.
VT...None.
AREA FORECAST DISCUSSION National Weather Service Albany NY 1003 PM EST Fri Dec 1 2023
SYNOPSIS
A disturbance and front will continue to bring rain into this evening before tapering off tonight. There will be plenty of clouds around on Saturday, with a few light showers as a weak area of low pressure tracks across upstate New York. Then, a more substantial storm system looks to bring widespread precipitation arriving early Sunday and lasting into Monday. At this time, mostly rain is expected for lower elevations, while higher elevations could see some wet snow mixed in at times.
NEAR TERM /THROUGH SATURDAY/
Most of the precipitation is gone and just isolated to scattered showers in northern areas could linger after midnight, based on satellite and radar trends and near term mesoscale model guidance. Just minor adjustments to rain chances, sky cover and temperatures through the night.
PREVIOUS DISCUSSION: Areas of rain, mainly light in intensity, will continue into early this evening associated with the passage of an upper level short wave disturbance. At the surface, a front will be draped from SW to NE across Lake Ontario into the St Lawrence Valley and will remain quasi-stationary. Our area will be on the warm side of the front tonight. Plenty of low level moisture lingering, so while steady rain should end during the evening it will be cloudy through the rest of the night. Lows will be mainly in the mid/upper 30s, with some lower 30s in mountain areas.
On Saturday, the front will likely remain stalled to the north of our area, with flat ridging aloft and a mild SW flow.
However, at the surface it will still be somewhat cool due to expected cloud cover and an inversion. In term of precip chances, a weakening area of low pressure looks to track across the lower Great Lakes and along the stalled front over northern NY through the day. Most of the precip will be north of our area, but the low will be close enough to bring some showers to areas mainly north of I-90. Chances for showers will decrease by later in the day as the system weakens considerably. Highs expected to range from upper 30s/lower 40s north to lower 50s south. Despite clouds, it will be mild for early Dec.
SHORT TERM /SATURDAY NIGHT THROUGH MONDAY/
Sat night looks to be fairly quiet into the early overnight hour, however as high pressure drifts east across Quebec low level sub- freezing air could seep southward into parts of the Adirondacks and southern Greens of VT. Low level moisture trapped beneath a strengthening subsidence inversion could lead to patchy freezing drizzle where temperatures are 32F or less.
This should be fairly localized, but will have to watch for some icy spots on untreated surfaces. Across most of the area, it will just be mostly cloudy and mild with chances for showers gradually increasing as low pressure start to approach from the south/west. Lows expected to range from the lower 30s in coldest spots of the Adirondacks and southern Greens, with mid to upper 30s elsewhere.
The active pattern continues, with the next storm system already moving in from the south/west by Sunday morning.
Guidance depicting a stronger system with a potent upper level short wave and a dual-cyclone set up at the surface. There is high confidence in widespread moderate QPF, but the main question is regards to precip types. This will be highly dependent on the strength of the primary(inland) vs secondary(coastal) cyclone. If the primary low maintains its relative strength, then mainly rain would be expected. However, if the secondary cyclone ends up being stronger then some snow would be possible across northern and especially higher elevation areas such as the Adirondacks and southern Greens. At this time, highs expected to be in the 30s for the Adirondacks/S. Greens, with 40s elsewhere. With an initial push of milder air aloft with the primary cyclone, snow would be more favored later in the day into Sun evening should the latter scenario play out. For areas along and south of the Thruway mostly rain is expected, except possibly mixing with snow before ending Sun night with minimal impacts.
With an open wave trough aloft, the system should move through fairly quickly with steady precip expected to end late Sun night into early Mon morning. There could be some wrap-around/upslope snow showers into the western Adirondacks, otherwise just some scattered light rain/snow showers associated with the passage of an upper level trough axis. It will continue to be mostly cloudy with westerly winds increasing and becoming gusty in wake of the departing storm system. Highs Mon should be in the 40s for lower elevations and 30s in the mountains.
LONG TERM /MONDAY NIGHT THROUGH FRIDAY/
No significant storms expected in the long term, although there will be some nuisance unsettled weather at times. Overall pattern looks to feature a broad upper level trough across the Great Lakes and Northeast, with a few minor disturbances passing through at times through Wed. Temperature will trend slightly below normal through the period, so any precip that falls will be in the form of snow showers. Best chances would be across higher terrain upslope areas such as the western Adirondacks and southern Greens, with little activity outside these areas. Even there, mainly just scattered snow showers expected with only minor accumulation in some spots.
A clipper-type system may affect at least parts of the region in the Thu night to Fri time frame. However, there is considerable spread in the guidance with regards to its track, so for now will just mention slight to low chance PoPs and mostly confined to higher terrain areas. This could bring some accumulating snow to some areas depending on the eventual track.
Temperatures should remain slightly below normal through next week.
AVIATION /03Z SATURDAY THROUGH WEDNESDAY/
Mainly VFR in light rain. Some MVFR visibilities at times at KGFL in more steady rain. As the low levels gradually saturate, some lower clouds should form and some fog could form, too.
Indicating MVFR ceilings developing through the evening at all TAF sites and MVFR ceilings continuing through the day Saturday, as the frontal boundary does not move much as low level moisture remains. MVFR visibilities possible in steadier rain this evening at all TAF sites but lingering a bit longer around KGFL, through about 11Z. VFR visibilities Saturday morning and afternoon as the rain will have exited but again, clouds lingering all day.
Light and variable, mainly light south winds at less than 6 Kt tonight, continuing through Saturday morning and afternoon.
Outlook...
Saturday Night: Moderate Operational Impact
Chance of RA
DZ.
Sunday: High Operational Impact. Definite RA.
Sunday Night: High Operational Impact. Definite RA.
Monday: Moderate Operational Impact. Chance of SHRA.
Monday Night: No Operational Impact. NO SIG WX.
Tuesday: No Operational Impact. NO SIG WX.
Tuesday Night: No Operational Impact. NO SIG WX.
Wednesday: No Operational Impact. NO SIG WX.
ALY WATCHES/WARNINGS/ADVISORIES
CT...None.
NY...None.
MA...None.
VT...None.
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Airport Reports
EDIT (on/off)  Help Click EDIT to display multiple airports. Follow links for more data.Airport | Dist | Age | Wind kt | Vis | Sky | Weather | Temp | DewPt | RH | inHg |
Wind History from PSF
(wind in knots)Catskill
Click for Map
Fri -- 05:25 AM EST 3.35 feet High Tide
Fri -- 07:04 AM EST Sunrise
Fri -- 11:08 AM EST Moonset
Fri -- 11:24 AM EST 0.44 feet Low Tide
Fri -- 04:24 PM EST Sunset
Fri -- 05:25 PM EST 3.99 feet High Tide
Fri -- 08:11 PM EST Moonrise
Tide / Current data from XTide NOT FOR NAVIGATION
Click for Map
Fri -- 05:25 AM EST 3.35 feet High Tide
Fri -- 07:04 AM EST Sunrise
Fri -- 11:08 AM EST Moonset
Fri -- 11:24 AM EST 0.44 feet Low Tide
Fri -- 04:24 PM EST Sunset
Fri -- 05:25 PM EST 3.99 feet High Tide
Fri -- 08:11 PM EST Moonrise
Tide / Current data from XTide NOT FOR NAVIGATION
Catskill, Hudson River, New York, Tide feet
12 am |
0.1 |
1 am |
0.8 |
2 am |
1.7 |
3 am |
2.5 |
4 am |
3 |
5 am |
3.3 |
6 am |
3.3 |
7 am |
2.8 |
8 am |
2.1 |
9 am |
1.3 |
10 am |
0.8 |
11 am |
0.5 |
12 pm |
0.5 |
1 pm |
1.2 |
2 pm |
2.3 |
3 pm |
3.2 |
4 pm |
3.7 |
5 pm |
4 |
6 pm |
3.9 |
7 pm |
3.6 |
8 pm |
2.8 |
9 pm |
1.9 |
10 pm |
1.2 |
11 pm |
0.6 |
Coxsackie
Click for Map
Fri -- 12:19 AM EST -0.07 feet Low Tide
Fri -- 06:33 AM EST 3.41 feet High Tide
Fri -- 07:04 AM EST Sunrise
Fri -- 11:08 AM EST Moonset
Fri -- 12:20 PM EST 0.49 feet Low Tide
Fri -- 04:23 PM EST Sunset
Fri -- 06:41 PM EST 4.67 feet High Tide
Fri -- 08:10 PM EST Moonrise
Tide / Current data from XTide NOT FOR NAVIGATION
Click for Map
Fri -- 12:19 AM EST -0.07 feet Low Tide
Fri -- 06:33 AM EST 3.41 feet High Tide
Fri -- 07:04 AM EST Sunrise
Fri -- 11:08 AM EST Moonset
Fri -- 12:20 PM EST 0.49 feet Low Tide
Fri -- 04:23 PM EST Sunset
Fri -- 06:41 PM EST 4.67 feet High Tide
Fri -- 08:10 PM EST Moonrise
Tide / Current data from XTide NOT FOR NAVIGATION
Coxsackie, Hudson River, New York, Tide feet
12 am |
-0 |
1 am |
0.1 |
2 am |
0.8 |
3 am |
1.7 |
4 am |
2.5 |
5 am |
3 |
6 am |
3.3 |
7 am |
3.3 |
8 am |
2.8 |
9 am |
2 |
10 am |
1.5 |
11 am |
1 |
12 pm |
0.5 |
1 pm |
0.6 |
2 pm |
1.4 |
3 pm |
2.5 |
4 pm |
3.5 |
5 pm |
4.2 |
6 pm |
4.6 |
7 pm |
4.6 |
8 pm |
4.1 |
9 pm |
3 |
10 pm |
2.1 |
11 pm |
1.4 |
Albany, NY,

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